Filter News
Area of Research
News Topics
- (-) Frontier (13)
- (-) Isotopes (19)
- (-) Machine Learning (7)
- (-) Materials Science (20)
- 3-D Printing/Advanced Manufacturing (5)
- Advanced Reactors (1)
- Artificial Intelligence (21)
- Big Data (13)
- Bioenergy (5)
- Biology (6)
- Biomedical (11)
- Biotechnology (1)
- Buildings (3)
- Chemical Sciences (7)
- Clean Water (2)
- Climate Change (12)
- Composites (2)
- Computer Science (47)
- Coronavirus (7)
- Cybersecurity (2)
- Decarbonization (4)
- Energy Storage (7)
- Environment (18)
- Exascale Computing (12)
- Fusion (2)
- Grid (3)
- High-Performance Computing (20)
- Materials (21)
- Mathematics (1)
- Microscopy (7)
- Nanotechnology (9)
- National Security (4)
- Net Zero (1)
- Neutron Science (14)
- Nuclear Energy (13)
- Partnerships (3)
- Physics (13)
- Polymers (4)
- Quantum Computing (11)
- Quantum Science (10)
- Security (2)
- Simulation (10)
- Software (1)
- Space Exploration (3)
- Summit (21)
- Sustainable Energy (5)
- Transformational Challenge Reactor (2)
- Transportation (7)
Media Contacts
The 21st Symposium on Separation Science and Technology for Energy Applications, Oct. 23-26 at the Embassy Suites by Hilton West in Knoxville, attracted 109 researchers, including some from Austria and the Czech Republic. Besides attending many technical sessions, they had the opportunity to tour the Graphite Reactor, High Flux Isotope Reactor and both supercomputers at ORNL.
The team that built Frontier set out to break the exascale barrier, but the supercomputer’s record-breaking didn’t stop there.
Making room for the world’s first exascale supercomputer took some supersized renovations.
The world’s first exascale supercomputer will help scientists peer into the future of global climate change and open a window into weather patterns that could affect the world a generation from now.
Raina Setzer knows the work she does matters. That’s because she’s already seen it from the other side. Setzer, a radiochemical processing technician in Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s Isotope Processing and Manufacturing Division, joined the lab in June 2023.
In response to a renewed international interest in molten salt reactors, researchers from the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory have developed a novel technique to visualize molten salt intrusion in graphite.
ORNL hosted its annual Smoky Mountains Computational Sciences and Engineering Conference in person for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic.
As Frontier, the world’s first exascale supercomputer, was being assembled at the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility in 2021, understanding its performance on mixed-precision calculations remained a difficult prospect.
Outside the high-performance computing, or HPC, community, exascale may seem more like fodder for science fiction than a powerful tool for scientific research. Yet, when seen through the lens of real-world applications, exascale computing goes from ethereal concept to tangible reality with exceptional benefits.
It was reading about current nuclear discoveries in textbooks that first made Ken Engle want to work at a national lab. It was seeing the real-world impact of the isotopes produced at ORNL